Joe Henderson & Alice Coltrane :: The Elements / World Spirituality Classics 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda

The new reissue label Jazz Dispensary did us all a favor this year by bringing, The Elements, Joe Henderson and Alice Coltrane's lone collaboration, back to the marketplace, rescuing it from wild Discogs prices (even CD reissues are out of control). The album, originally released in 1974, can sit comfortably alongside such contemporaneous classics as Don Cherry's Brown Rice or Pharoah Sanders' Love in Us All. Like those efforts, The Elements draws from a heady brew of non-jazz influences from India and Latin America (not to mention hints of dub, funk and soul), resulting in a well-nigh unclassifiable blend. But it's a blend that always bewitches, whether it's the appropriately passionate opener "Fire," which pits Henderson's rich tenor sax against Coltrane's cascading harp, or the mystical vibes that fuel "Earth," with legendary bassist Charlie Haden and drummer  Leon "Ndugu" Chancler  laying down an immovable groove for Henderson, Coltrane and violinist Michael White to float freely over.

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Joseph Shabason :: Long Swim

Joseph Shabason has performed saxophone on recordings from the likes of Destroyer and the War on Drugs. Aytche, his first solo album, was released by Western Vinyl at the end of August. Better late than never is always a good rule of thumb; one that’s especially true here. “Long Swim” builds on a somewhat strange foundation; looped sax; a mélange of field recordings (including falling rain, dogs barking, birds chirping), and a coarsely textured rhythm. Eventually, Shabason’s playing moves gracefully to the forefront, framing . . .

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Margo Price :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

It might have seemed like country singer Margo Price emerged out of nowhere with her 2016 album Midwest Farmer's Daughter. But the real story is more complicated than that. Price kicked around Nashville for about a decade, working odd jobs and playing with her band Buffalo Clover before signing to Jack White's Third Man Records. Those years of experience contributed the fully formed sound of her debut, and are why her second album,  All American Made, feels like an such a sure  step forward. The usual lyrical suspects of drinking, trouble-making, and wrongdoing are all here, but the album also finds Price engaging her civic voice, addressing income inequality, American history, identity, and loss. It's not entirely a reaction to the Trump Era -- she wrote the songs during the Obama years -- but it's hard not to hear the voices of the disenfranchised when Price sings, "I don't need ten million/baby, just give me one that works," on the title track, a revisited number from her past, or to apply her words, "I wonder if the president gets much sleep at night," to the current man holding the office.

Margo Price :: Weakness

The lp also furthers Price's skill as a conduit of American music. Though the echoes of Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, and Jessi Colter on Midwest Farmer's Daughter earned praise from traditionalists, Price's definition of Americana is a generous one. Threads of soul, gospel, and loose R&B run through All American Made. It's not entirely Price's country funk record, but songs like "Cocaine Cowboys" and "Do Right By Me" dig deep into that aesthetic. Which isn't to say she doesn't embody pure twang singing alongside Willie Nelson on the heartbreaking "Learning To Lose," a song that would dominate country radio were there any justice in this world.

AD reached Price at her home in Nashville, where she's preparing for the release of  All American Made,  which hits record shops Friday, October 20th. We discussed the continuum of American music, the enduring majesty of Nelson, and figured out how her strident songs fit into our current moment.

Aquarium Drunkard: You worked on the songs for Midwest Farmer’s Daughter for a very long time. Did the new songs for All American Made come fast?

Margo Price: Well, my husband [Jeremy Ivey] and I are always writing all the time. We’ve just made it our mantra throughout life to write as much as possible. I look at writing songs almost like people would look at practicing guitar: the more you practice, the more songs you write, the sharper you are going to be at your craft. I think these songs came pretty naturally because I was so thrilled to finally have an audience. It didn’t feel like, “Oh, I have writer’s block” or something like that. It [finally] felt like my work would be discovered before I’m dead.

AD:  That’s always a good feeling.

Margo Price: Yeah, we had been working on some of these songs even back around when that album was finally being released, because it took a while from when the Midwest Farmer’s Daughter was recorded to the time it was actually put out. We were just still writing that whole time. Even on tour, we were making a point of keeping up with it. Jack White actually gave me really great advice. He said, “I know you're really busy right now and playing a lot of shows and on the road constantly, but keep writing because you are going to be experiencing a lot of new feelings that you’ve never had before, so you want to document that and encapsulate it.”

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (Noon EST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can be heard twice every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 498: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Sweet Tea - If I Were A Carpenter ++  Mr. Airplane Man — Jesus On The Mainline (Traditional) ++ Bonnie “Prince” Billy - Beast For Thee ++ Scout Niblett - Kiss ++ Meg Baird - Counterfeiters ++ Anna St. Louis - Fire ++ Jennifer Castle - Sailing Away ++ Joan Shelley - Over And Even ++ Devendra Banhart & Jana Hunter - A Bright-Ass Light ++ Kacy & Clayton - The Siren . . .

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Catching Up With Destroyer :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

"I saw you at the castle/your eyes were clearly insane," Dan Bejar sings on "Saw You at the Hospital," one of the tenderest songs on ken, his twelfth album under the Destroyer banner. It's a line that typifies the way a Destroyer song works: though not a single album in Bejar's discography has sounded the same as another, a unifying thread of bemused absurdity makes each immediately identifiable. On ken, Bejar and producer Josh Wells dismantle the lush rock of 2015's Poison . . .

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Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile :: Lotta Sea Lice

On Lotta Sea Lice, their debut album of duets, Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile sound relaxed and unfussy. This is no overthought (or overwrought) "supergroup" type outing; it's simply two pals, comfortable in their friendship and respective sonic identities, getting together to kick out some tunes, mutually. It wasn't even intended to be an album, not at first at least. "I think our plan was loosely to record two songs," Barnett . . .

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Acetone :: Sam Sweet’s Hadley Lee Lightcap

The music of Acetone seems to exist outside conventional methods of timekeeping. Off to the side. Suspended and slightly warped.

Likewise, the story told about the band in Sam Sweet’s non-fiction novel, Hadley Lee Lightcap and in the grooves 1992-2001, the book’s accompanying audio companion, eschews a strictly chronological approach. The book drifts, warm and hazily, through the lives of the Los Angeles trio, bassist . . .

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Jim O’Rourke :: Calder Walk (Whitney Museum)

As one never steps into the same river twice, so one never glimpses a Calder mobile in quite the same way again. Once set into motion, the pieces in “Alexander Calder: Hypermobility,” now on display at the Whitney Museum, rotate and revolve, their starry components tracing elegant and elegantly perturbed orbits. From a complex premise–cubist simultaneity extended into three dimensions–the mid-century sculptor arrived at the playful innovation we now associate more with a child’s nursery than with international modernism: where once there seemed to be stasis, there is instead only pure, fleeting relation.

Jim O’Rourke’s latest composition aspires to complement (and, in a way, even helps to clarify) this dimension of Calder’s work. Commissioned for Hypermobility, “Calder Walk” is a work of extended, atmospheric avant-jazz ingeniously embedded in the exhibit by way of a stream accessible on the museum’s website. A natural outgrowth of the Whitney’s adventurous multimedia programming, and in particular of Jay Sanders’ superb music curation, the result is an experience as amusing as it is melancholic, paradoxically lonely and communal.

Like the material that inspired it*, “Calder Walk” resists yielding a complete picture from any one vantage point. Instead, it accumulates tension through its loose, ambling structure, suggesting repetition without ever precisely retracing its own slippery footsteps. O’Rourke’s distinctive brass arrangement sets the tone, fading in and out over a slide guitar, evoking the sculptures’ elongated, flexible grace. Absentminded piano chords join the mix, along with hustling drums–a montage-signifier of stop-start glances and shuffling feet.

Jim O'Rourke :: Calder Walk

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Nick Lowe :: The Aquarium Drunkard Interview

This year, Yep Roc's massive Nick Lowe reissue campaign went into overdrive. The label re-released 1982’s Nick the Knife, 1983’s The Abominable Showman, and 1984's Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit over the summer, and two more mid-period albums drop on October 20, 1988's Pinker and Prouder Than Previous and 1990's Party of One, effectively putting the entirety of Lowe's catalog back in print. To cap off a banner year, Lowe will perform this month at the label's 20th anniversary celebration, Yep Roc 20, backed by Los Straitjackets.

Back in July, Lowe was a guest on Aquarium Drunkard's Transmissions podcast. The topic was his '80s catalog -- which found Lowe embracing country, skiffle, and new wave pop -- but the producer, songwriter, and performer was quick to talk about lots more, including his marriage to Carlene Carter, the connections between punk and pub rock, his early influences, and the spirit behind hits like "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding."

That conversation, minimally edited for clarity, is presented below. Tune into to the Transmissions podcast. Subscribe on  iTunes  or via  RSS feed.

Transmissions Podcast :: Nick Lowe

Aquarium Drunkard: I guess we’ll start off by talking about how on July 14th, Yep Roc is releasing Nick the Knife and The Abominable Showman and then the rest of the year is going to see them release the entirety of your '80s discography. What has it been like revisiting these records, Nick the Knife through Party of One? How has that felt for you, revisiting this era?

Nick Lowe: Well, how can I put this? [laughs] I haven’t really revisited them much at all.

AD: [laughs] Yeah?

Nick Lowe: Yep Roc was kind enough to put them out again, but I wasn’t really consulted. That’s not a complaint. They just decided they would get them out there again which is really nice because they have gone out of print. I don’t know anybody who really listens obsessively to their own records, at least not after they’ve immediately been recorded. I mean, I listen to my records for two or three weeks after they’ve finished. I listen to them quite a lot then and then you put them away and that’s it. And hearing your old records, especially someone like me, when they didn’t play my stuff very often on the radio -- occasionally they will play an old one or even a new one -- and if you hadn’t heard [it] for a while, it’s a very strange experience. It was even when I had a big hit record like with “Cruel To Be Kind” and they played it all the time. I used to hear it all the time on the radio. It always [seemed] like there’s some mistake. Somehow it slipped through the wire and it doesn’t sound like anything else. All you can hear is, in my case, what’s wrong with it.

But the records I made from that era...the '80s..were tough to listen to really because I wasn’t in very good shape. I mean I know that it’s all in the ear of the beholder. I might go, “Oh man, I was definitely offbeat with that one” but what I’m hearing as offbeat, other people hear something really cool or a fantastic approach. What are you gonna do? You're gonna do your best at the time and that’s it.

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SIRIUS/XMU :: Aquarium Drunkard Show (Noon EST, Channel 35)

Our weekly two hour show on SIRIUS/XMU, channel 35, can be heard twice every Friday — Noon EST with an encore broadcast at Midnight EST.

SIRIUS 497: Jean Michel Bernard — Générique Stephane ++ Wilco - Handshake Drugs (First Demo Version) ++ Kevin Morby - 1234 ++ Jonathan Rado - All The Jung Girls (Diane Coffee cover) ++ John Cale - The Man Who Couldn’t Afford To Orgy ++ David Vandervelde - Corduroy Blues ++  Girls - Headache ++ Amen Dunes - Green Eyes ++ Nap Eyes - Stargazer ++ John Andrews & The Yawns - Relax ++ Silver Jews - Federal Dust ++ Richard Swift - Most . . .

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Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Songhoy Blues / Teragram OCT 19

The desert blues from Timbuktu. Thursday night, October 19th, Aquarium Drunkard Presents Songhoy Blues at the Teragram Ballroom in Los Angeles. You want to see this. We've saved a stack of tickets we're giving away to AD readers. Hit up the comments with your name to enter, along with your favorite LP of 2017...so far.

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SQURL (Jim Jarmusch & Carter Logan) :: The AD Interview

In Jim Jarmusch's beatific Paterson, Adam Driver plays a bus driving poet named Paterson, living in Paterson, New Jersey. It's a film guided by patterns: the patterns Paterson's wife Laura wears, the pattern of his day to day routine, the repeating patterns of twins throughout the film. It's a film about the poetry of "normal life," and it features words by Ron Padgett, writing for Driver's character, which call back to William Carlos Williams' epic poem, called Paterson, of course. There's a quick but pivotal verse by Method Man . . .

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Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – Don’t Bring Me Down (Live ’78)

Putting on a Tom Petty record at wall shaking volume is one of life’s finest, simple pleasures. Tom Petty’s entire career is a wax wonder, and one thing that has been evident since his incredibly sad passing is that he was also a great uniter -- seemingly, everybody was moved by his music.

The man was the embodiment of rock ’n’ roll; he was a second generation fan who soaked up Elvis but then pledged his allegiance to the British invasion. No mere copycat, when he stepped up to cover a song from one of his heroes, the love . . .

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Rahsaan Roland Kirk :: Montreux Jazz Festival 1975

Until my machine is up-and-running, and I wake up with those stunning views of Lake Geneva, just plant me in front of youtube and start typing "Montreux Jazz Festival 197-".

Today, we highlight the 1975 set from Rahsaan Roland Kirk. "Mar-cee, mar-cee to you, thank you very much. Bright moments. Peace... and all that kind of stuff." Draped in his customary accouterments of instruments, Kirk leads his band through jazz in all its iterations, blurs the line between banter and spoken word, and educates the non-English speaking crowd on Fats Waller.

It was Kirk's return to the festival sur le lac, having cut the seminal I, Eye, Aye there in 1972. This performance would be part of the equally important and sanguine Kirkatron.

A mere four months after this taping, Kirk would suffer a devastating stroke - but he would soldier on for another two years before his untimely and all-too-soon passing at age 41. We're blessed with so much of his time in Montreux being accessible. Make the most of it...until your time machine is working again. words / b kramer

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Diversions :: Wand / The Various And Sundry Brew Behind Plum

Diversions, a recurring feature on Aquarium Drunkard, catches up with our favorite artists as they wax on subjects other than recording and performing.

Following the quick succession of a trio of albums beginning in 2014 (along with the 2016 release of Cory Hanson's solo endeavor, The Unborn Capitalist From Limbo) the LA based Wand return with album four -- Plum. At 10 tracks it's the groups most nuanced work to to date, both aesthetically and atmospherically. As such, we were curious as to what was brewing behind the scenes while cutting the album in the Sierra Nevada foothills of Grass Valley, CA. As it turns out, a lot. Below, members Evan Burrows, Cory Hanson, Robert Cody, Sofia Arreguin and Lee Landey take us on a tour; one involving Sonic Youth and Joan Didion to Yerba Mate, tuna fish sandwiches and beyond.

Sonic Youth / Sister: This record was indispensable for me during the time we were working on  Plum--  as  an accomplice, a refuge in my grief and confusion, a sterling object lesson in musical space and surface.  Plenty's been said about it, so why not say more? It's like a pulsing heart, shimmed at every junction with slides of freezing glass, liters of blue blood leaking everywhere. Or it's like a waning half moon, tilted just so, spilling silver all over all the many-colored things. Somehow, this record seems to seek in sympathy with the struggle of youth for reality. I think we have always wanted our own records to feel like a sympathetic seeking along these lines.  Sister  howls in celebration at how splendid, mad circuitries of dystopian fantasy sprawl out from pre-verbal grief. It allows asymmetry, and wonders at how feedback sings and swells like a brain in an otherwise empty skull. "Angels are dreaming of you." - EB

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